The Forty Foot or Forty Foot Drain is a name given to several of the principal channels in the drainage schemes of
the Fens of Eastern England, the name being qualified when there is a need to distinguish between them. They are Vermuyden's Drain, South Forty Foot and North Forty Foot.
The Forty Foot Drain in Cambridgeshire
The Forty Foot Drain, also known as Vermuyden's Drain, is an artificial drainage
river in
Cambridgeshire, which is one of the key elements in draining the Middle Level of the Bedford Level, in the Cambridgeshire part of the Fens. It was instrumental in Sir
Cornelius Vermuyden's great drainage scheme of 1649–1653. Located near
Chatteris and
Ramsey, the river runs , from Wells Bridge, where it joins the old
River Nene, to
Welches Dam
Welches Dam is a hamlet and former civil parish, now in the parish of Manea, in the Fenland district, in the county of Cambridgeshire, England. It is around to the north west of Ely. The parish covered an area of . Within the parish boundaries w ...
Sluice, where it joins the Counter Wash Drain, which then changes identity, becoming the
Old Bedford River. These junctions are at grid references and respectively. When the drain was newly made, its western end was in
Huntingdonshire. The waters of the Forty Foot Drain no longer discharge through
Welches Dam
Welches Dam is a hamlet and former civil parish, now in the parish of Manea, in the Fenland district, in the county of Cambridgeshire, England. It is around to the north west of Ely. The parish covered an area of . Within the parish boundaries w ...
Sluice. Instead they flow via the Sixteen Foot Drain to Three Holes and thence via the Middle Level Main Drain and the pumping station at
Wiggenhall St Germans to the sea. The Sixteen Foot Drain connects to the Forty Foot drain above Horseway Lock.
Forty Foot Drains in Lincolnshire
The main land drain in Holland Fen (as distinct from the
River Witham, which is designed to carry water past the fens without being part of them) is known as the North Forty Foot Drain. That of the Black Sluice fens is the
South Forty-Foot Drain. The latter flows, with some pump assistance, from
Bourne
Bourne may refer to:
Places UK
* Bourne, Lincolnshire, a town
** Bourne Abbey
** Bourne railway station
* Bourne (electoral division), West Sussex
* Bourne SSSI, Avon, a Site of Special Scientific Interest near Burrington, North Somerset
* Bourne ...
North Fen, close to the
River Glen, to
the Haven at
Boston. The North Forty Foot joins the South Forty Foot in the western outskirts of Boston and together their waters enter the Haven through the
Black Sluice.
[ Ordnance Survey]
North Forty Foot Drain
According to Wheeler:
Also called Lodowick's Drain. A drain in Holland Fen, running parallel with the Witham, and extending from Chapel Hill to the South Forty Foot at Boston. Formerly emptied into the Witham at Lodowick's or Trinity Gowt." "Lodowick' or Lodovick's Gowt. The outfall of the North Forty-Foot Drain, situated on the west side of the old channel of the Witham, about above Boston Church. It had a waterway of . Was also called Trinity Gowt.[W.H. Wheeler, 'A History of the Fens of South Lincolnshire' Boston and London (1896) Appendix I]
The drain gives its name to the village of
North Forty Foot Bank
The North Forty Foot Bank is a settlement which runs about along the North Forty Foot Drain, about five to nine miles north-west of Boston Lincolnshire, England. It begins just south of the parish of Chapel Hill and runs along the drain to T ...
.
South Forty Foot Drain
The main drain in the Black Sluice District, extending from Boston Haven to Gutheram Cote (
sc.
The abbreviation ''viz.'' (or ''viz'' without a full stop) is short for the Latin , which itself is a contraction of the Latin phrase ''videre licet'', meaning "it is permitted to see". It is used as a synonym for "namely", "that is to say", "to ...
modern
Guthram Gowt
__NOTOC__
Guthram Gowt is a small settlement in the South Holland district of Lincolnshire, England. It is situated both east from Bourne and west from Spalding, and at a bend in the River Glen.
History
The word 'gowt' refers to a sluice or ...
). This drain was first cut by the Adventurers who drained the Lindsey Level in the middle of the 17th century. It was afterwards opened out and improved under the
Black Sluice Drainage and Navigation Act 1765
The South Forty-Foot Drain, also known as the Black Sluice Navigation, is the main channel for the land-drainage of the Black Sluice Level in the Lincolnshire Fens. It lies in eastern England between Guthram Gowt and the Black Sluice pumping ...
.
The present sluice was erected under the
Black Sluice Drainage Act 1846
The South Forty-Foot Drain, also known as the Black Sluice Navigation, is the main channel for the land-drainage of the Black Sluice Level in the Lincolnshire Fens. It lies in eastern England between Guthram Gowt and the Black Sluice pumping ...
and has three openings of a total waterway of sixty feet.
See also
*
Cornelius Vermuyden
References
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Rivers of Cambridgeshire
Rivers of Lincolnshire
Drainage canals in England
Fenland District
Canals in Lincolnshire
Canals in Cambridgeshire
Canals opened in 1653
1653 establishments in England